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midilink.txt
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1990-12-31
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SOME NOTES ON MIDILINK MIDI BBS NETWORK
and Network BBS Etiquette
1. A LITTLE HISTORY
First there was the Washington MIDI Users Group BBS. When then Sysop
Chris Bosshardt moved to Chicago and established the Sound Management
Music BBS, he got lonely for his friends in Washington, and we set up
a network to exchange messages between our two BBS's. Chris left
Sound Management in the capable hands of Dave Nosek and moved on to
Los Angeles and a vacation from Sysopping. Dave liked the idea of
networking and within a year, began adding other boards to the
network. MIDILINK has been growing.
2. WHAT NETWORKING MEANS and HOW IT WORKS
What the network does, simply stated, is to create common message
bases among all the BBS's that participate in the network. Not all
participating BBS's carry all of the conferences, but, in general, any
message left on this BBS will appear in an appropriate conference on
all the other BBS's in the network. This means that you now have
access via BBS message to fellow MIDI enthusiasts in other parts of
the country. You'll find that people use different software and
different computers on other places, and have different sets of
problems and interests. It's kind of exciting.
The way it all works is that some time in the middle of the night, the
BBS runs a utility program which puts all the new messages in a single
packet, calls the hub BBS, uploads that packet, and downloads a packet
of new messages from other BBS's on the network. It then unpacks
them, puts them into the conferences where they belong, and they're
there for you to read the next day. Since everything has to go
through the hub, there can be up to a two day delay in getting a
message turned around, but, heck, it's faster than US Mail.
The network relays messages only. We make no attempt to duplicate
each other's files, so you might discussions on another BBS which
mention some file that doesn't exist here. Files can be transferred
through the network, but we don't do it very often, and never on large
files, since it costs us money in long distance phone charges. If
you're interested in a file that isn't here, leave a message to the
sysop of the BBS where it is located, and he'll either ship it over
the network or mail it by disk. We try to cooperate.
3. KEEPING IT UNDER CONTROL
Along with the advantages of having message exchange with other BBS's
throughout the country go some added responsibilities. Remember, with
the network growing, the message bases grow, and not everyone will
have time to read all the messages. It's more important than ever now
to be aware of the different conferences on this BBS, and to be sure
that you leave messages in the most appropriate conference. When
people call a special interest BBS or join a specialized conference,
they expect to see messages about a specific topic.
It's difficult to draw clear lines, since there's such a close
relationship between software and hardware in our field, but with just
a little thought, you can keep messages, for example, about digital
copying of DAT tapes out of the IBM MIDI conference and in the
RECORDING conference. Just keep this in the back of your mind and
nobody's kneecaps will get broken.
Also, try to keep message header SUBJECT consistent with the topic of
the message. It doesn't take long, through repeated back-and-forth
replies, for a message to get waaaaaaaay off the subject unless
someone does something consciously to alleviate it. Be aware that on
most BBS's, you are prompted for a SUBJECT, even when replying to a
message. The default SUBJECT for a reply is always the same as the
message to which you are replying. If the default SUBJECT is, say,
Cakewalk CAL, but the message you're writing is really about D-10
Patches, please edit the SUBJECT field. You may even realize that the
response really should be in another conference. We sysops don't want
to be cops, so doing your part to keep the messages on topic will make
it easier to read message threads and locate messages on particular
topics.
4. PRIVATE MESSAGES, LOCAL MESSAGES, AND RELATED STUFF
PRIVATE MAIL:
You can exchange private (Receiver Only) messages through the
network. Since all messages (unless they're routed, see below) go
to all BBS's in the network, the relay software on the receiving
end needs to know whether or not to keep a private message. No
point in keeping it if it's addressed to someone on another BBS,
right? It does this by looking at a "mailbox" file, and dumps
the message if the addressee isn't on the list.
If you expect to receive private messages, be sure to set up a
mailbox. You do this by entering a simple message in any
conference, addressed to PCRELAY, with the word ADD in the first
line, like this:
TO: PCRELAY
SUBJECT: MAILBOX
_______________________________________________
ADD
Some BBS's may give you a message telling you that PCRELAY is not
a user on the system. Don't worry, just go ahead and leave the
message anyway. The next day (after 4 AM) you'll be on the
mailbox list. It's all automatic.
Before you send a private message to someone on another BBS, you
might want to leave him a public message first, asking if he's
set up a mailbox. Otherwise, you might not get a reply, because
he won't see your message.
NON-RELAYED MESSAGES:
If you pay attention to the prompts when you're entering a
message, you'll see one that says "Echo to other systems?". The
default is <Y>, but if you answer <N>, your message won't go to
other BBS's. This is useful for messages which are of only local
interest, and helps keep clutter down on the network. If you're
leaving a private message for someone on this BBS, set the echo
off - no sense sending it out only to be dumped by all the other
BBS's.
If you're using an off-line reader such as EZ-Reader, you don't
have this option. Don't worry about it.
ROUTED MESSAGES:
You can send a message that will go to only one BBS in the
network by "routing" it. The routing addresses of the BBS's in
this network are listed at the end of this bulletin, but it's
also part of the tagline in every message that's come through the
network. For example,
PCRelay:SNDMGMT -> #618 MIDILINK MUSICIANS' NETWORK
This identifies this message as one that originated from Sound
Management BBS, and it's routing code is SNDMGMT, the name right
after "PCRelay:".
To route a message, put the routing address on the first line of
the text of the message, preceded by "->" (hyphen, greater-than
symbol), for example:
TO: DAVE NOSEK
SUBJECT: ROUTED MESSAGES
_______________________________________________
->SNDMGMT
Hi, Dave. I'm experimenting with routed messages. Did
anyone else get this one?
5. CONFERENCES
These are the conferences on this BBS, most of which are carried by
the other MIDILINK BBS's. Not all boards carry all the conferences.
Use this as a guide for deciding where to enter a message.
Conference name Subject
MAIN Things that don't fit anywhere else
IBM IBM MIDI Software and hardware
APPLE Apple/Mac MIDI Software and hardware
COMMODOR Commodore/Amiga MIDI Software and hardware
ST-ATARI Atari ST MIDI Software and hardware
FORSALE Musical things for sale or trade - lets try not
to load this one up with computer parts, used
cars, and dining room tables. Non-MIDI
instruments and studio equipment are fine.
GENERICS Instruments, utilities, patches, music, and in
general, things that are not computer specific
RECORDING Recording and Audio
PROGRAMMING MIDI Programming (computer)
SAMPLING Samplers and sampling
PERSONNEL General discussions about computers, operating
systems, politics, concerts, software, business,
etc. that don't involve MIDI.
COLLAB Song writer's/music collaboration conference
6. MIDILINK BBS's
Name Location Sysop Routing
---------------------------------------------------------------
Sound Management
Music BBS Mundelein, IL Dave Nosek SNDMGMT
WMUG Washington
MIDI Users Grp. Falls Church, VA Mike Rivers MIDI
Taste BBS Brooklyn, NY Max Bernard TASTE
St.Louis MIDI Users Lake St. Louis, MO Rik Brown TRAVEL
Union Lake BBS Millville, NJ UNION
Llama Bob's BBS Dallas, TX Tim Hoffman LLAMA
HyperLinc West BBS Moraga, CA Jake Essl HYPER
A-V Sync BBS Atlanta, GA Bill Tullis AVSYNC
Hub-City BBS Nanaimo, Canada George Joubin CITYHUB
HOT BBS Tennessee Larry Reeves HOT
Fleming BBS Peterborough,Canada Mike Sage FLEMING
The MIDI Exchange Toronto, Canada Tom Thayer MIDIEX
MIDIMaze BBS Chattanooga, TN Lee Smith MIDIMAZE